Screening | Film/Video

The Ballad of Suzanne Césaire

A quiet, powerful dreamlike film that reimagines the possibilities of the period biopic. 

A couple stands outside looking at a photo together.
Date
Mar 20, 2025
Cost
$5.00 - $10.00
Time
6 p.m. ET
Location
Wex Center for the Arts

Film/Theater

“We are making a film about an artist who did not want to be remembered"(Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich, 2024). So states the titular figure of Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich's The Ballad of Suzanne Césaire, while breaking the fourth wall. Set amid a lush Caribbean-inspired landscape—captured using the Wexner Center's 16mm film camera—this award-winning film smoothly melds an awareness of its own production with a narrative account of the life of Suzanne Césaire. An Afro-surrealist poet and anti-colonial activist, she was long overshadowed by her husband, Aimé Césaire (who featured prominently in the Sarah Maldoror exhibition presented at the Wex in 2024). The film invites recognition of Césaire’s life and legacy as a mother, teacher, writer, and organizer. Actors read her writing aloud, blurring the line between reality and fiction in a lyrical commentary on the making of a biopic. In English and French with English subtitles. (75 mins., DCP) 

A conversation about the film with director Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich and Wexner Center Executive Director Gaëtane Verna follows the screening. 

Supported by a 2023 Film/Video Studio residency. 

See the entire Picture Lock lineup.